Holder: 'I mark myself pretty hard after a performance but I don't beat myself up'

The allrounder says West Indies should be wary of Zimbabwe, Ireland and Scotland in the first round of the T20 World Cup

Deivarayan Muthu25-Sep-2022Fearlessness and clarity of thought, Jason Holder says, have transformed him into a versatile white-ball player. From being thrashed by AB de Villiers in the 2015 World Cup game in Sydney, where he went for 104 in ten overs, Holder has added more strings to his white-ball bow and is now among the most sought-after allrounders in T20 cricket.Holder can not only bowl with the new ball but also nail yorkers at the death. With the bat, he can finish the innings as well as construct it up the order and disrupt spinners with his long reach. After Barbados Royals’ regular captain David Miller and regular wicketkeeper Quinton de Kock returned home to tune up for the India tour, Holder was promoted to No. 5 against Guyana Amazon Warriors. He responded with an unbeaten 40 off 33 balls on a Tarouba track where no other batter passed 20.Related

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“I think I’ve come a long way,” Holder told ESPNcricinfo, reflecting on his evolution. “I was actually sharing the experience I had in one-day cricket down to AB de Villiers when he played in Johannesburg first and then in the 2015 World Cup in Sydney. I think at those times I was probably a little bit timid, and I understand that to be successful in and amongst the big dogs in the game, you need to be brave and clear.”I think clarity goes a long way in anything you do – in sport and probably life. Having a clear mind to execute – it definitely helps in a big way. I think back then and [during] my development over the years, one thing that is probably talked about is my bravery – being able to put my hand up in tough situations and get myself through. I mark myself pretty hard after a performance but I’m not one of those persons to beat myself up; I understand that life is full of setbacks and life is full of disappointments but it’s more or less about how you rebound from it. And I think the biggest thing to take from the experience is learning. Once I learn from an experience, it’s just more or less about trying not to repeat the same mistakes and that’s where the learning takes place.”

“Ramon Simmonds has really impressed me… To just see his composure under pressure and then him having the confidence to execute slower balls and yorkers to big players at big stages of the game is quite impressive”

Holder prides himself on being a senior player who shows the way for the youngsters in the Royals set-up. Having seen the progress of Ramon Simmonds from close quarters, he gave the 20-year-old left-arm seamer a glowing appraisal. Simmonds is only in his first CPL season but has fronted up to bowl the tough overs for Royals and the management is so impressed by him that their franchise (Paarl Royals) scooped him up for the SA20 too.”The main thing for them [youngsters] is to understand themselves and that’s something I had to work out coming up as a youngster as well,” Holder said. “For me it’s important, I help pave the way for them to understand themselves. Once I do that, I think the execution becomes a lot easier for them. Someone like Ramon Simmonds has really impressed me, particularly because this is the first time I’ve played with him. To just see his composure under pressure and then him having the confidence to execute slower balls and yorkers to big players at big stages of the game is quite impressive to me. I think he has talent that not many people can boast of at such a young age. Once he continues to develop, the sky’s the limit for him.”Obed McCoy, the other left-arm quick, has also been central to Royals’ run to the playoffs, forging a potent partnership with Holder. McCoy and Holder have taken a combined 27 wickets so far with their bag of variations.”Obed has obviously been around now for a couple of years and his skill level is right up there,” Holder said. “He’s probably one of the most skilled bowlers that we’ve produced in a very long time, and it is showing – he has been successful around the world. He has played in the IPL, county cricket, he has done well in the Caribbean as well. Again, if he continues to develop, and understands himself, then nobody can really stop him.Holder is among the leading wicket-takers in CPL 2022•CPL T20 via Getty Images”He has got the talent and all the deliveries you could think of. So, it is important for me to continue to help them. Whatever they ask, just try to have answers for them. If I don’t have answers at a particular time, [I] try my best to find them and help them as much as I can. It’s like being a parent. I don’t have any children but I see them as my little sons (). So, it has been great so far and I’ve enjoyed it – not only on the field but off the field as well.”Holder backs Pollard, Sammy’s calls for a local T20 tournament
Holder has added to the chorus for a local T20 tournament in the Caribbean that could act as a stepping stone for the CPL. Trinbago Knight Riders captain Kieron Pollard and St Lucia Kings head coach Daren Sammy had earlier called for a domestic T20 tournament, in addition to the 6ixty and the CPL, that would help expand West Indies’ talent pool.

“Ireland, Scotland and Zimbabwe by no means are pushovers. We’ve got to take it as seriously as we possibly can and just make sure we get into the next phase of the tournament”

“I 100% agree [with Sammy and Pollard],” Holder said. “I think we need to play more T20 cricket. If you look around the region, the only T20 cricket we play is the CPL cricket. There should be a stepping stone to the CPL and that way we will see a lot more local talent being exposed. I think it will be fairer on franchises to actually see the full set of talent we have here in the Caribbean. Trust me there’s a lot more talent in the Caribbean that we’ve not had the privilege to see and if you have a stepping-stone tournament leading up to the CPL, I think it gives you a great opportunity to see a wider bundle of talent.”Holder also hopes to see more age-group tournaments and camps to groom talent although that would be a financial strain on CWI.”Along with doing that [staging a local T20 tournament], maybe more development camps, maybe more camps to bring the young talent we have and just try to develop them. It’s tough on Cricket West Indies, yes, and it’s a heavy burden in terms of financial costs, but if we can find some sponsors to have more camps and more age-group tournaments and more age-ground workshops, then I feel we can really hone in and develop the talent that we have here in the Caribbean. A lot of people have talent, but talent doesn’t get you anywhere. You’ve put in hard work and development around it to really reap the benefits of talent.”Holder is one of the most sought-after allrounders in T20 cricket•Getty ImagesWI should be wary of Zimbabwe, Ireland and Scotland – Holder
Holder has warned his West Indies team-mates against complacency in the first round of the T20 World Cup, where they will face Scotland, Zimbabwe and Ireland.”We’ve got a task to uphold in terms of qualifying first [for the main round],” Holder said. “More or less, we have to focus on the qualifier [first round]. Ireland, Scotland and Zimbabwe by no means are pushovers. We’ve got to take it as seriously as we possibly can and just make sure we get into the next phase of the tournament.”West Indies left out Andre Russell and Fabian Allen for the T20 World Cup, but Holder is pleased with the depth in the squad and sees the qualifier round as an opportunity to build early momentum in the tournament.”I think it’s good in a way that we’re playing the qualifiers,” Holder said. “West Indies teams of the past have proved that we get better as we go along. To have the warm-up phase of the tournament and then to go into the actual group stage after qualification, I think it’s going to be to our betterment in the sense we get more cricket. The talent we have got – depth in terms of resources and batting and bowling – we’ve always been pretty athletic in the field, so I’m looking forward to that challenge. But before that, I want to finish off strongly with the Royals and lift that [CPL] trophy.”

AB de Villiers on Hashim Amla: 'I can literally write a book about you'

Hashim Amla retired from all forms of cricket on January 18; here’s how the cricket world paid tribute to the South African batter

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Jan-2023

Hyderabad prodigy G Trisha hopes to live her father's dreams at the U-19 World Cup

The 17-year-old allrounder first picked up bat and ball at the age of two and has never looked back since

Annesha Ghosh13-Jan-2023Where would Indian women’s cricket be without farsighted fathers?Dorai Raj made a cricket icon out of a sleepy girl. Harmander Singh Bhullar raised his firstborn “like a son” and she went on to take India into the World Cup final with an epochal 171 not out. Shriniwas Mandhana was so smitten by left-hander batters that he ensured his naturally right-handed daughter morphed into one of the game’s most prolific left-hand openers. Ivan Rodrigues and Sanjeev Verma pushed against all sorts of obstacles to turn the first female child in their respective families into teen debutants for India.The latest in the list of enterprising Indian dads making precocious international cricketers out of their daughters is GV Rami Reddy. G Trisha, his only child, considers him “the single biggest reason” why she has made it to the squad of 15 to represent India at the inaugural Under-19 Women’s World Cup, which kicks off in South Africa tomorrow.Related

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“I came to know cricket through my dad at a time when I could barely tell what cricket was,” Trisha, 17, says of her early initiation into the sport as a two-year-old. “Maybe it’s only as I grow older that I’ll be able to fully appreciate my dad’s contribution in my life and cricket, all the sacrifices he’s made for me, the direction he’s given my life.”A batting allrounder who bowls legspin, Trisha has been considered a prodigy on the domestic circuit for as long as she has played the game at the competitive level. At seven she took part in the Telangana state’s district senior women’s meet and featured in the U-19 girls competition organised by the School Games Federation of India a year later.Trisha on her father’s role in her career: “I think he has everything sorted in his head since I started playing the sport, with a plastic bat and ball, or even before that”•Courtesy GV Rami ReddyWhen only a few months shy of nine, she played for Hyderabad’s U-16 side in the inter-state tournament in 2014-15. The following season she broke into the state U-23 side and not long after that, made her debuts for the Hyderabad and South Zone U-19s.The last time a young female cricketer turned heads in Hyderabad cricketing circles with this kind of precocity, she ended up being the leading run-scorer in the women’s international game. “Mithali Raj – what do I tell about her?” says Trisha. “Growing up in Hyderabad and training at the same coaching centre – St John’s Cricket Academy – as her are the obvious commonalities we share. But to get anywhere close to being a cricketer like her, I know I will have to keep working hard.”I have seen her practise at the academy since my father enrolled me there as a seven-year-old. Like for many others, she’s been a role model for me too, and I have been quite lucky to get advice from her whenever she visits the academy.”Better still, call it a coincidence or something else, Mithali was one of the batters I ended up bowling to on my senior debut for Hyderabad, against Railways.”In that tournament, the 2017-18 senior women’s inter-state T20 competition, Trisha featured primarily as a bowler. Her consistency apart, that she could open both the batting and bowling for her age-group sides played a part in fast-tracking her into top-flight domestic cricket.”It’s majorly down to my dad’s planning,” says Trisha, laughing, when asked about what making her senior debut a few weeks after her 13th birthday felt like. “Sure, me gradually taking a liking to the sport did help but had he not got me into the game early, I wouldn’t have been able to have this much domestic cricket under my belt already.”G Trisha’s career stats

India U-19: 6 matches, 130 runs, 3 wkts
List A: 20 matches, 370 runs, Highest score: 69, 17 wkts, Best 5 for 17
T20s: 21 matches, 335 runs, Highest score: 56*, 16 wkts, Best 3 for 10

“I think he has everything sorted in his head since I started playing the sport, with a plastic bat and ball, or even before that.”A former fitness trainer with the ITC conglomerate in Bhadrachalam, a small town in south-east Telangana, Reddy, who is now 52, quit his job of more than a decade and moved to East Marredpally, a residential suburb of Secunderabad in 2013.”The only motive was to give Trisha better opportunities to train and play proper cricket,” he says. “To make a world-class cricketer from a country of more than 1.30 crore population requires effort and early investment, and that’s what I have tried to do. Bhadrachalam didn’t have quality facilities or cricket grounds, so I had to risk what was a settled life for me and my family until then.”A former U-16 national-level hockey player from Andhra Pradesh in the early 1980s, Reddy felt being short-statured put him at a disadvantage to pursue a career in one of his other favourite sports, tennis.”I didn’t have the genes [of height], but had the passion, so when I got married, I made up my mind that girl or boy, I will provide everything my child needs to play cricket for India. It’s a sport where, like football, you can excel even if you are short.”Reddy, true to his words, was on the job soon after Trisha was born in 2005, the year India Women made their first appearance in a World Cup final. That tournament was played in South Africa, where she is now set to play in the U-19 World Cup.Former Hyderabad spinner and India fielding coach R Sridhar has been one of the guiding forces behind Trisha’s rise to international cricket•Courtesy GV Rami Reddy”In that era, women’s cricket was fairly unknown in our country – a pity if you think of the heights the likes of Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami were taking Indian cricket to at the time,” reflects Reddy. “My understanding was that most kids in India typically start playing cricket at age six or seven. I needed to do something extra to give my daughter an edge.”For starters, he would put on cricket on the television at home and in the gyms of the ITC facilities where he worked, while his wife, G Madhavi, breastfed infant Trisha. Reddy affectionately recalls how the 18-month-old would be drawn to the luminescence of the screen. “Those little eyes, the light brightening up her tiny face as she lay in her mother’s lap… there was something special about those moments. Her first brush with cricket, really.”By her second birthday Trisha had a plastic bat in hand and would knock plastic balls at public parks in Bhadrachalam. When she was three, Reddy introduced her to practising with the tennis ball, and at four, she would frequently do batting drills in the corridors of the gyms he worked in. The number of balls Reddy would throw at her daily also increased over time: from 100 to 200 and then 300.”For those many knockings, the only trade-off was that Dad had to buy me something I liked,” Trisha says. “Mostly, it would be crayons or drawing books or any related stationery, because I have always enjoyed drawing. It’s gone from being one of my favourite pastimes as a kid, besides swimming, to something that now helps me unwind, switch off from cricket.”Reddy then had a cement pitch laid at a local ground in Bhadrachalam. One of his gym instructors took up coaching duties with Trisha in the evenings, and Reddy looked after her practice in the morning. Each session lasted nearly two hours, with an hour thrown in to work on her fitness too. In all, since the time she was around four, Trisha devoted some six hours a day to jogging, swimming, learning to bat, field and bowl medium pace.Trisha with India U-19 coach Nooshin Al Khadeer, who was in various coaching roles in Hyderabad as the youngster rose up the ranks in domestic cricket•Annesha Ghosh”It was after we moved to Secunderabad,” Reddy says, “that coaches John Manoj and Sreenu sir at St John’s suggested she become a spinner. “Trisha was seven at the time, and she was making steady progress as an opening batter. The coaches felt switching to spin could keep her from picking up injuries common to pace bowlers.”Her action, somewhat roundarm, has evolved naturally, says Reddy; he thinks it’s a bit like the Afghanistan wristspinner Rashid Khan’s. Among the coaches who have worked with Trisha to date, he reserves special thanks for R Sridhar, the former India men’s fielding coach, who was part of the backroom staff at St John’s, and former India spinner Nooshin Al Khadeer, the India U-19 coach at the World Cup, who held coaching positions at Hyderabad during Trisha’s debuts across all domestic teams.”Their guidance has been indispensable to Trisha’s journey,” he says. “Among other important advice, they encouraged her to retain her style of bowling when most felt it ‘looked unnatural.'”In October 2018, Trisha she was selected along with many India internationals in the National Cricket Academy’s spin-bowling camp in Baroda under Raj Kumar Sharma, who coached Virat Kohli when he was young.In the lead-up to the U-19 T20 World Cup, though, it’s her primary skill, batting, that has remained the focus within her all-round proficiency. She made the starting XI in all the preparatory series the India U-19s have played since November: the quadrangular series in Visakhapatnam, the bilateral assignment against a New Zealand Development side in Mumbai, and the away series against South Africa.India won them all, and Trisha says she enjoyed the experience of batting at No. 3. “The New Zealand series was our first bilateral series, and being an opener, coming at one-down brought me new learnings about my batting and adaptability.”A young Trisha in the nets•Courtesy GV Rami ReddyIn the T20 World Cup warm-ups, she made a five-ball 2 and 36-ball 44 batting at No. 3, against Australia and Bangladesh respectively.Reddy says Trisha’s solidity of technique, as well as her along-the-ground strokes and fitness to play long innings, could see her do well at No. 3.”Her coaches and I appreciate she’s only starting to get strong, so we have focused on her lofted strokes only after she turned 16,” he says. “Going for big shots when she lacked the power could have led to low returns. Without the runs, making the World Cup squad would have been unlikely.”Reddy says he goes over every performance of Trisha’s and carefully oversees her diet. To give his undivided attention to her cricket, he has quit his job and supports his family with the proceeds from the sale and lease of some ancestral land in Bhadrachalam.”Every month I use 20-30 new balls for her, and send her to special fitness and group coaching, give good nutrition involving chicken and fish, quinoa, dragon fruit, kiwi, blueberries, apples…” he says. “Cricket is an expensive sport but I am doing all I can.”It takes a village to raise a child, they say. But if Reddy’s efforts come to fruition, and a shared dream of his and Trisha’s becomes a reality, by the end of this month he might be remembered as the father who created a World Cup winner for India from scratch. It will be a first in the history of women’s cricket in the country.

FAQs: Everything you need to know about the Ranji Trophy 2022-23 season

Formats, big names in participation, new players… our explainer gives you the lowdown

Shashank Kishore12-Dec-2022So, the Ranji Trophy is set to begin on December 13. What’s new?
For starters, we will have a full season, and not a curtailed one. Unlike in 2021-22, where the tournament was divided into two phases – pre and post-IPL – due to Covid-19, this one will run for 10 weeks starting Tuesday.And is everything else apart from the format the usual?
Nope. The BCCI has tweaked it in an attempt to ensure the quality of its flagship first-class competition is not diluted. This time around, the tournament has been split into two categories: Elite and Plate. Which means we’ll also have two separate winners.Related

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That sounds interesting. Can you tell us more?
Remember the pre-quarter-final last year, when Jharkhand amassed a lead of 1008, the highest in first-class history, against Nagaland? Or maybe Mumbai’s 725-run win over Uttarakhand in the quarter-final, the biggest win in terms of runs in all first-class cricket? The BCCI is hoping we won’t have such mismatches this year in the knockout stages.Simply put, we will not have the Plate teams crossing over to take on the Elite teams during the knockout stages. Instead, they will play against teams at their level of competency, which the BCCI hopes would foster better competition.Okay, two groups, two winners, and all that. But what is the format?
The top two from each Elite group, consisting of eight teams each, make the quarter-finals after an intensive league phase of equal home and away matches. In Plate, which is a six-team pool, each side plays the other five after which the top four make it to the semi-finals. The bottom two will feature in a playoff for fifth and sixth, while there will be another playoff for third and fourth. This way, they get to play the same number of seven league games like the Elite teams.How do the Plate teams progress?
The two Plate finalists will be promoted to the Elite group for the 2023-24 season, while the bottom two teams of all the four Elite groups combined – factoring in both points and quotient – will be relegated.Sarfaraz Khan made 982 runs in last season’s Ranji Trophy•PTI Okay, now that the technicalities are out of the way, let’s talk about players. Are there any big names in participation?
Well, yes. Ajinkya Rahane is leading Mumbai, while Ishant Sharma will be playing for Delhi. Suryakumar Yadav will be available for Mumbai’s second round game against Hyderabad. Cheteshwar Pujara will be available for the league phase after the first two rounds, which coincide with India’s Test tour of Bangladesh. Hanuma Vihari and Mayank Agarwal, captains of Andhra and Karnataka respectively, will be looking to give their stalled Test careers another wind.What about the newer players – who should we look out for?
Yash Dhull, among Delhi’s youngest captains, will be looking to build on an excellent fist-class initiation. While he could just manage 17 and 20 in his first India A stint in Bangladesh, he’s racked up 820 runs in 13 innings, including four hundreds. Then there’s Yashasvi Jaiswal, fast emerging as a serious contender among the next-in-line openers. Like Dhull, he’s had a great start. Coming off a hundred in Bangladesh for India A, he’s taken his first-class tally to 1173 runs in 15 innings at an average of 83.78.Among the fast bowlers, there’s Bengal’s Mukesh Kumar who is potentially the closest to India selection among the next-in-line fast bowlers. Mukesh is currently injured with a hamstring strain and will miss the first two rounds, but his control and ability to deck the ball around has earned him plaudits from the outgoing selection committee. He was to replace Mohammed Shami in Bangladesh, but an injury on the shadow tour means the wait may extend a little longer.Who are India’s next spinners after R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja and Axar Patel?
For now, the selectors seem bullish on Uttar Pradesh’s Saurabh Kumar. The left-arm spinner has been in excellent form, picking up 15 wickets in two red-ball games with India A in Bangladesh, and is now in the Test squad as a replacement for the injured Jadeja. Among the wristspinners, there’s Kuldeep Yadav and Rahul Chahar. While there may not be an immediate requirement given India have four competent bowlers up top, they will eventually need to slowly start to look at life beyond Ashwin and Jadeja in the longest format. This Ranji season could throw up a few names.Before you go, can you quickly recap who was the top run-getter and wicket-taker for the last two seasons?
Among Elite teams, Mumbai’s Sarfaraz Khan topped the charts in 2019-20, making 928 runs in nine innings at an average of 154.66. Overall that season, Arunachal’s Rahul Dalal made 1340 runs to top the charts, he fell short of VVS Laxman’s all-time record of most runs by 75 runs. Among the bowlers, Jaydev Unadkat’s record-breaking 67 wickets helped Saurashtra win the Ranji Trophy. Unadkat is now reaping the rewards of the good work over the past few seasons, having been recalled to India’s Test squad after 12 years.In 2021-22, Sarfaraz was once again among the runs, topping the charts with 982 runs in nine innings at 122.75, including a century in the final where Mumbai lost to first-time winners Madhya Pradesh. Mumbai left-arm spinner Shams Mulani picked up 45 wickets to top the bowling charts.

Morgan and Pollard sizzle as New York Strikers win five on the trot

Morgan scored a majestic 87* off 35 against Warriors, while Pollard made a seven-ball 26 against Bulls

Aadam Patel01-Dec-2022In terms of making statements, two wins in less than 24 hours is some way to go about business and that is exactly what New York Strikers have done at the Abu Dhabi T10.Since losing their first game on opening night, Kieron Pollard’s side have won five on the trot and after Eoin Morgan’s majestic 87* off 35 deliveries on Wednesday night against Northern Warriors, it was the turn of Pollard for some last over heroics against Delhi Bulls.With 22 runs needed off the last over in the first game of Thursday’s triple-header, Pollard stepped up to the plate and hit Dwayne Bravo for two sixes and then two fours to seal yet another victory. Morgan may have done it on the last ball. Pollard ensured there was none of that drama and did it with two to spare.In truth, a target of 113 should not have posed a serious challenge, especially the day after Strikers had chased down 144 and scored the highest total of the tournament thus far.After winning the toss, Tom Banton’s 46 off 23 allowed the Bulls reach three figures in a game where Rashid Khan made his eagerly-awaited debut for the Strikers franchise and without taking a wicket, showed his class with a tight couple of overs.Morgan’s heroics the night before meant that Strikers opted for the rather experienced if not unusual pairing of himself and Paul Stirling to open the batting. It was a strange sight for a man regarded in his prime as one of the great finishers but this is T10 and anything goes. The former England captain was in the runs again but failed to accelerate and when he was dismissed for 32, his side was still up against it, requiring 40 from 15.Step forward Azam Khan and Pollard. The floating powerplay in the penultimate over went for 16 and it came down to the heavyweight contest between Pollard and Bravo and a battle of two men who know each other so well.Bravo’s first delivery was a slower ball and Pollard landed the first punch and when Bravo’s second ball went the distance as well, the game was as good as done. By now, Bravo had lost his composure and his full toss was sent to the ropes, before Pollard finished the job with another boundary.It was a knockout blow that was celebrated with a clenched fist and a welcome knock for the skipper after a barren run in the competition, despite the form of his side. Since scoring 45* on opening night in a losing cause, Pollard had managed just one run in three innings but Thursday night in Abu Dhabi offered a reminder of his ruthless finishing ability and why he is still feared by bowlers around the world. That knack of hitting sixes at will sets him apart and if he carries on over the next few days, then there is every chance that the Strikers strike gold at the first time of asking.And while the Strikers seem to be hitting form at the right time, Team Abu Dhabi are also hitting the correct notes. It was the second successive night they restricted their opposition to a total of under 75 and again, they chased it down with relative ease.Once the in-form Iftikhar Ahmed was dismissed for two, Bangla Tigers struggled to get going and eventually ended on 74 for five. Chris Lynn’s unbeaten 34 navigated his side to the end before Brandon King hit the winning runs by sweeping Jake Lintott for six.Friday night’s last group game between the Strikers and Team Abu Dhabi is set to be a clash between two sides that are getting better and better as the tournament goes on and it would hardly be a surprise if the two teams were to meet again on finals weekend.

Rafiq, Vaughan, Yorkshire: a race reckoning

More than two years on into the Yorkshire racism saga, it has taken a toll on all sides, and landed all parties in a deeply unsatisfactory place

Osman Samiuddin24-Mar-2023Nobody other than a handful of people can ever know for sure whether Michael Vaughan said what he is alleged to have said to four Yorkshire players nearly 14 years ago. “There’s too many of you lot, we need to do something about that”, or in some recollections, with a slightly tweaked second clause: “we need to have a word about that”. Fourteen years is a long time, so a word lost here or there is to be expected, but nobody disputes – not the recipients or Vaughan – that, if uttered, it would have been a racist statement.Of the four – three British-Asians and one Pakistani – three say they heard it. Ajmal Shahzad says he didn’t hear it and says that Vaughan was not that way inclined, being the way of the racist. Rana Naved-ul-Hasan said he heard it but chose not to give evidence to that effect. Of the others in the vicinity that day, we don’t know.Not even the three-person panel of the Cricket Discipline Commission (CDC), who sat over a five-day hearing at the start of March for this and other allegations made by Azeem Rafiq can ever know for sure. They don’t need to. They aim to reach a verdict by the end of the month based on the lower of two yardsticks in adjudications: on the balance of probability, the yardstick for a civil hearing, and not proved beyond reasonable doubt. That is, on the balance of probabilities, did Vaughan say what he is alleged to have said, or not?Related

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Two and a half years after Rafiq began the most urgent conversation the UK has had about race in cricket, and here we are, obsessing about those words. It is not, perhaps, where anyone intended to be. But given how it began, that is not surprising. The interview Rafiq gave to wisden.com’s Taha Hashim in August 2020 did not intend to focus on the racism he says he suffered at Yorkshire. That was a detour in an otherwise evocative profile on the fading of a once promising young cricketer who was a symbol of the county’s inclusiveness credentials.Then it barrelled away, slap-bang, into a fervent and ongoing culture war. People lost jobs. Careers ended. Sponsors left. Allegations of racism at other counties tumbled out. The government took note. Parliamentarians held hearings. Newspapers took sides. Social media poured petrol on to the burning heap. Yorkshire were left on the verge of financial ruin.And then here we were, at the International Arbitration Centre in the heart of London, its slick and featureless interior with unremarkable conference and meeting rooms, the anaesthetising aesthetic designed, one might reasonably suspect, to draw the sting and heat from the disputes to be settled within.

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Hard evidence for the Vaughan allegation is scant, so to speak. Broadcast footage of the pre-game huddle at about the time Vaughan is alleged to have said it, exists. But it’s a tease. There is no footage of the exact moment the remark is alleged to have been made when the huddle broke away to enter the field.The investigation into whether Michael Vaughan, seen here arriving at the International Arbitration Centre for hearings earlier this month, made a racist utterance has been undermined by questions raised about how it has been conducted•Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty ImagesThe footage is not incriminating, which explains why it has been used by both the prosecution – the ECB in this case – and Vaughan’s defence for their own ends. Jane Mulcahy, the ECB’s lead counsel, highlights a 19-second gap in footage away from the camera where such a thing been said. Christopher Stoner, Vaughan’s lawyer, counters that the footage confirms Vaughan’s innocence. The team goes on to the field in good spirit; Adil Rashid, one of the quartet allegedly targeted by this remark and who says he heard it, is seen joshing with Tim Bresnan (who has also been charged with making racist comments on a separate occasion). There’s no way he would have said it, Vaughan reasons, because that’s not who he is, and especially not before a game because the impact would have hurt his side’s chances of winning.Even Vaughan shaking hands with the four players, as seen on the clip, has been weaponised. The prosecution say it is a sign he singled them out. The defence say it reflected a moment of genuine pride, referred to in Vaughan’s memoir from the same year: three British Asian players, homegrown, turning out for Yorkshire, a county with a long, exclusionary history, was worth celebrating.The prosecution sees Vaughan’s social-media persona as central. Referring to some of his tweets from that time – which Vaughan agreed were “unacceptable” – they say the tone is similar to the alleged remark. “If a person has a tendency to make racist comments,” Mulcahy argued, before garnishing it with some QED, “they have a tendency to make racist comments.”Mulcahy’s case builds on the atmosphere at Yorkshire CCC in that time as supporting evidence. The club has since admitted failing to address the systemic use of racist language. Two Yorkshire players, Matthew Hoggard and Gary Ballance, have admitted to making racist remarks in that period. Vaughan says he couldn’t recall Hoggard making such remarks in the dressing room. (Six other individuals as well as Yorkshire were charged by the ECB, though only Vaughan appeared to defend himself. Yorkshire and Hoggard have admitted, or part-admitted to some charges; the others have all denied them and refused to attend the hearing, claiming the process is flawed.)The crux of Vaughan’s defence, meanwhile, is that the ECB investigation was deeply flawed. Stoner called it “woefully and wholly inadequate”. The ECB, Stoner said, was hellbent on pinning Vaughan from the off, not only by not interviewing enough people but not even interviewing Vaughan himself, as well as ignoring evidence and testimony that was counter to their case. “Due process matters and it is the cornerstone of law,” Stoner said. “But in our submission, it was sent on holiday by the ECB.”There’s plenty else for the panel to consider; the amount of paperwork submitted constitutes a ferocious assault on the environment. A lot of it is one person’s word against another’s, though, so the case more or less boils down to this: Vaughan’s social media and various admissions on the one side, against potential flaws in the ECB investigation on the other.Protesters at Headingley in November 2021, following the publication of parts of the report of an investigation Yorkshire conducted into Rafiq’s allegations•Peter Byrne/PA Photos/Getty ImagesWords are important, as acknowledged in an exchange between the ECB’s legal head Meena Botros and Stoner, but the question for the panel is: whose?

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If that feels like a deeply inadequate place to be in after all this, then it is of a piece with the entire hearing. The CDC is more used to parochial housekeeping – sanctioning counties for fielding improperly registered players or issuing points deductions for poor pitches. Occasionally there might be the flutter of an anti-corruption breach or a doping case. Recently it has encountered racism-adjacent territory, retrospectively punishing players for inappropriate social-media behaviour in the past.This is bigger. This is one of the most successful modern England captains, a prominent media personality, against the man who has become the face of antiracism. This is a battle for unclaimed frontiers in that culture war. If Vaughan is found not guilty but the others charged are, it will likely allow many to see it as proof that there is no racism in English cricket, or that the problem is overblown; or that Rafiq is – and this is already a popular trope in such cases – a troublemaker. If Vaughan is found guilty, he has the right to appeal, and given that he has argued the very shape of his “life and livelihood” is at stake, he will exercise it. There is no end here, only more ammunition for the culture war.Yet on paper this hearing is about alleged breaches of ECB directive 3.3, which isn’t specifically about discrimination or racism. It is about bringing the game into disrepute. The ECB has an anti-discrimination code and a directive (3.4) that says each participant must be bound by it, but because that was only introduced in March 2021 and these cases pre-date it, charges cannot be laid under that code. That it took the ECB until 2021 to put in place a specific nationwide anti-discrimination code for all cricket under its jurisdiction, and then only as a response to Black Lives Matter, is itself an indictment. It isn’t as if these issues are new or that Yorkshire is the only county side with a past.It also speaks to the complicated historical nature of such allegations, and indeed more broadly, of the moment we find ourselves in. Laws and codes change as communities and values do, but they still can’t be applied retroactively to past behaviour, even though it might seem suitable to do so. Or, as the columnist Hadley Freeman wrote two years ago about the late novelist Philip Roth, whose work was being, let’s say, robustly reappraised in light of #MeToo: “Looked at from the point of view of today, every single thing from the past is on the wrong side of the modern moment, because that’s how time works.”In this case, of course, it isn’t that the words and behaviours in question were not offensive in 2009. They were; this isn’t the re-editing of Roald Dahl’s books which are much further away from the modern moment. But, as with the panic when old, inappropriate tweets from current England players were dug out, there’s no satisfactory consensus yet on how to deal with it.Consequently, having the CDC be the arbiter of what amounts to a Brief Modern History of Racism in English Cricket is much like the trial for the murder of Nicole Simpson being adjudicated upon by the Brentwood Residents’ Committee in LA.

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The greater burden and scrutiny in these matters must fall necessarily on institutions. They are the ones who make the rules, who maintain them, and who run investigations against those who break them. The case Stoner made against the ECB’s investigation of Vaughan’s allegations, lasering in on procedural flaws, was compelling. Arguably, though, the bigger questions about the roles of the ECB as a regulatory body and one of its constituents, Yorkshire, which Stoner crept up to without quite raising fully, are more troubling.The ECB under Tom Harrison launched an investigation into racism in Yorkshire cricket, but the board’s position has been riven by conflicts of interest•Getty ImagesYorkshire have behaved exactly as you would imagine a county at war with itself might. When they first conducted an independent investigation, using the legal firm Squire Patton Boggs (SPB), the club was not found to be institutionally racist, although seven of 43 allegations Rafiq made, including of racist behaviour, were upheld. Nevertheless, Yorkshire’s chairman when the investigation took place, Roger Hutton, told parliamentarians (after he had stepped down) that he thought the club institutionally racist.Hutton’s own underwhelming standing within the county didn’t help and, done in by a lack of support from the ECB and Yorkshire, he was replaced by Lord Kamlesh Patel. A renowned former social worker in Bradford who had worked his way up and through the English establishment to become a peer, Patel seemed right for the job. He had been an independent director on the ECB board, loved cricket, and had experience of racism first-hand.Under his chairmanship, Yorkshire turned 180 degrees, admitting that the club had failed to address the systemic use of racist language by multiple players and employees over a long period. That sounds a lot like admitting to institutional racism without admitting to institutional racism, and a not unreasonable inference to draw is that it allowed Yorkshire to escape deeper cross-examination at the CDC, while also displaying sufficient culpability.Initially Yorkshire had said they would take no further disciplinary action after the SPB investigation. The investigation, which began in September 2020, took nearly a year. The report was presented to Yorkshire in August 2021 but to this day has not been published in full (it emerged that Hutton had links to SPB, bringing the firm’s independence into question).But soon after Lord Patel became chair in November 2021, the club summarily sacked 16 backroom and support staff. It was dressed up as a necessary reset of the club’s culture. Many of the 16 had put their names to a letter to the county board, complaining about the reputational damage Rafiq’s unchallenged claims had wrought on the club and about, as they saw it, his “one-man mission” to bring down the club.And then a week before the CDC hearing began, the kind of stuff CIA suits go to jail for at the end of Bourne films: Yorkshire publicly admitted to a mass deletion of emails and documents relating to the Rafiq case, but by unspecified persons and at an unspecified time around that of Lord Patel’s appointment. Except, during the hearing it was reported that senior club officials were sure that the documents were still in Yorkshire’s possession well after Lord Patel took over. Yorkshire are not unfamiliar with internal strife historically, but rarely can the club have been as pulled apart, at both ends of this culture war.A banner with an antiracist message on a fence at Headingley Stadium in 2021•Oli Scarf/AFP/Getty ImagesThe sackings feel now like an inflection point. Two of the signatories to the letter – head coach Andrew Gale and bowling coach Richard Pyrah – were among those charged by the ECB at the CDC. There was also the batting coach, Paul Grayson, who joined the men’s side in 2019, Rafiq had left the club, and so it wasn’t clear what the case against him had been. Kunwar Bansil, the club’s British Asian physio, was a signatory; Bansil was interviewed by Michael Atherton after he was sacked and spoke of a very different experience at Yorkshire to Rafiq’s.By then, though, there was no space in the discourse for grey. Everything had built unceasingly to this moment. The delay and secrecy over the SPB investigation, the lack of ostensible action in its wake, the public furore after Rafiq’s emotional appearance at a parliamentary committee. Somebody needed to pay and these 16 did.Except, by Yorkshire’s own admission, it was done without due process and was “procedurally unfair”. The letter the sacked staff had sent, seen by ESPNcricinfo, was bruising and not without vindictiveness in tone. It also did not acknowledge Rafiq’s experiences of racism at all, instead calling him “problematic” and “a complete liability off the field”. Firing the letter-writers, as Yorkshire did, ultimately cost the county nearly £1.5 million in severance payouts. The real cost was in entrenching the polarisation. Rafiq had been treated appallingly. Now there were 16 staff who could claim the same. At best, it was a purge; at worst, it came across as a crass act of revenge by Yorkshire on Yorkshire.Perhaps this wasn’t two Yorkshires but the same old Yorkshire, after all, as David Hopps said, detecting cruel irony in what Lord Patel had done. “Uncompromising, implacable, adamant that only his way is the right one, and supremely confident in his own moral compass, he has revealed many of the Yorkshire attributes that over generations have caused the county so much pain.”In a rare recent interview Patel gave to , he said that he had been asked by the ECB to come in and “turn the disaster around”. The publication claimed to disclose (in their words) that “the ECB urged him to get rid of people”. Which people wasn’t clear but Lord Patel said: “I was asked by the ECB to ensure some people who were there from the previous regime did not take part in that governance process.” The interview reads like a valedictory middle finger to the ECB – Patel steps down this month – claiming that ECB support wasn’t forthcoming once he had done what he had been asked to do.The interview was brought up at the CDC by Vaughan’s team, during a tense and uneasy exchange with Botros. It got close to what is, in some ways, the knotted heart of this matter – though it did not go right into it. Did the ECB, under pressure to act post-BLM and Rafiq, bring Lord Patel in specifically to clean house at Yorkshire? The interview leaves little doubt this was the case.Lord Kamlesh Patel speaks to the press after taking over as chairman of the Yorkshire board in 2021. It has emerged since that he might have been under pressure to sack people seen as belonging to the previous regime•Danny Lawson/PA Photos/Getty ImagesIf so, that would place the ECB as the game’s promoter and regulator, a former employer of Vaughan, a prosecutor in this case, and from one interpretation of Patel’s interview, an active participant because of the sackings. In the intersection of those duties, there must lie some conflict, and even, perhaps, a curtailing of the ECB’s ability – as Vaughan’s team argued – to be fair and impartial in the hearings. At best, as ESPNcricinfo’s UK editor Andrew Miller noted, it spotlighted the somewhat circular absurdity of the whole affair, the ECB charging its own constituents for failures that it, as the overall regulator of the game, must bear some responsibility for.Botros came across as both imperturbable and somewhat hapless, not least when Lord Patel’s interview came up, in a three-hour grilling. No, he said, he didn’t say Patel was not being truthful. But he also denied “any knowledge of the ECB telling Lord Patel to sack anyone”. He just didn’t have knowledge of the things Patel had spoken about.

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A little tempering of this critique of institutional failings is advisable, given that racism inquiries or investigations are messy, difficult processes and rarely resolved tidily. Nobody . Somebody just ends up slightly less unhappy than somebody else. As Cricket South Africa well knows, having grappled with issues of race, discrimination, and representation near daily since its readmission post-apartheid in 1992.Partly as a response to BLM and the discussions it ignited, CSA set up the Social Justice and Nation-building (SJN) hearings in the South African summer of 2021. It did not constitute a disciplinary process. They began as a compensatory process for players who had been victims of racism, but that idea was dropped because, well, putting a cost to racism is another level of messy.Instead, they became a bit like the country’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission after apartheid, an open house for former players and administrators to unload traumas. Some of the testimonies were harrowing. Others were little more than the ordinary grievances carried around like an ID badge by professional athletes who never quite made it.It was an imperfect process and ended up with the least desirable but most predictable outcome: having to weigh one person’s word against another’s in a formal disciplinary proceeding. Which is not tenable because victims of racism, as ESPNcricinfo’s South Africa correspondent Firdose Moonda likes to say, don’t carry around receipts for the racism inflicted upon them.Graeme Smith and Mark Boucher faced investigations after the hearings. Smith was cleared and charges against Boucher were withdrawn after witnesses, including Paul Adams, declined to appear. Smith was CSA’s director of cricket then and is now commissioner of the SA20; Boucher was South Africa coach then and is an IPL coach now. Of the receipt-less alleged victims, Thami Tsolekile was, and still is, serving a ban for corruption; Adams’ promising coaching career, meanwhile, was throttled by the board itself – according to a former board CEO – because of the deep-set inequalities in the game in the country.Adil Rashid features on a mural for the Hundred in Bradford. Rashid, along with the likes of Moeen Ali, has been seen as a success story of British Asians from the north of England making it big in cricket•Oli Scarf/AFP/Getty ImagesStill, the hearings served a purpose. They painted an alternative but necessary history of that great South Africa side, and really, of modern South African cricket. It was sobering and, hopefully, cautionary. The collective unburdening felt necessary at that point because these were stories that had not been publicly aired, and given they finally had been, at the very least they would provide some residual deterrence.This is not the CDC’s remit. All it is tasked with doing is to work out the probability of whether 14 words of racist intent were spoken in Nottingham in June 2009. (To be fair, had all those charged turned up to defend themselves, this would have been a more substantial audit; that they didn’t is not on the CDC). Also, the CDC (or English cricket) does not operate in a country in which racism was state policy. The SJN hearings had the very tangible and real legacy of apartheid to rail against. It gave that discourse a shape.English cricket has no such target. All it has is the anxious and hurried acknowledgment, after BLM, after Rafiq, that there is racism within the game. Is it institutional or does it permeate the game? The shape, extent, and nature of it is not clear. Yorkshire has been pulled up. How many skeletons exist in how many other counties’ closets? In recent years, the chairmen of Middlesex and Essex have been condemned or officially sanctioned for inappropriate or outright racist comments. Playing staff at both counties are deeply unrepresentative of London, given their pool of talent comes from London or Greater London, areas with the country’s most diverse demographic.What of the culpability of the ECB in all this, with the broader responsibility to make the game more inclusive? What of its own failures, including but not limited to the abysmally low rates of conversion of recreational cricket to professional cricket for British South Asians, barriers in pathways the ECB is aware of but has struggled to overcome; the fact that only one British Asian has ever been head coach of a county; or that there are two umpires of colour in a 34-person panel (after none were appointed for nearly two decades ); or the 75% decline over time in the number of black British professional players that led to Surrey setting up the ACE programme in 2020; or, in recognising, as Rainford-Brent has, that the problems of the game’s inclusivity might be more acutely centred around socio-economic status, with race as subset.A more holistic reckoning will come in the shape of a report by the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC). The Commission was formed two years ago to examine race, gender and class in the English game. It has collected evidence from over 4000 people of their lived experiences within the game and the report – which will be made public – is due soon. could be a lot of words to take in.

How Parshavi Chopra ventured from skating to googlies and found her feet in WPL

At one point, she wanted to be a fast bowler. Now she is troubling the best batters in the world with her legspin

S Sudarshanan23-Mar-2023Young Parshavi Chopra was told a few things about legspin. That she will have to risk getting hit and only then the chances of picking up wickets will rise. That it is wickets that will earn her laurels and not the low economy rate.In UP Warriorz’s game against Gujarat Giants earlier this week, Ashleigh Gardner and D Hemalatha had added 93 to keep Giants on track for a tall score. Both had displayed their range of strokes against seam and spin, but Warriorz captain Alyssa Healy trusted Chopra to bowl at the death.Chopra was part of India’s squad that won the Under-19 T20 World Cup in January this year. There she had bowled Sri Lanka’s Vishmi Gunaratne with a googly. The batter had danced down towards the off side but the ball spun past her pads to hit the stumps. But a majority of her 11 wickets in the tournament came off legbreaks.Between that World Cup and the WPL, Chopra worked on the googly and grew confident to use it more frequently.Now, bowling the 17th over of the innings against Giants, Chopra went for wickets instead of trying to stop runs. She tossed the first ball up to Hemalatha outside off. It was the wrong’un and Hemalatha didn’t pick it, holing out to long-on. On the first ball of the 19th over, her last, she once again flighted the googly to entice Gardner out of her crease and got her stumped.It was just the second appearance for Chopra in the WPL and she already left a mark on those who hadn’t watched her at the World Cup.Vishal Bhatia, her coach at Yuvraj Singh Centre of Excellence (YSCE) in Greater Noida, just outside Delhi, credits Chopra’s increased use of the googly to the target bowling sessions they had ahead of the WPL.”Before the WPL, we were working on target bowling, bowling in [various] situations, and when to use the googly,” Bhatia tells ESPNcricinfo. “She didn’t bowl the googly much in the Under-19 Women’s T20 World Cup. But now she is confident in bowling the googly and reading the batter well.Parshavi Chopra was the second-highest wicket-taker at the U-19 T20 World Cup•ICC/Getty Images”You can be needed in the powerplay or the death overs. We worked on what ball to use when and how to read the batter by looking at her stance. I told her that you shouldn’t play the name, but play the batter – it so happens you bowl to someone looking at their reputation – and the situation.”Chopra pursued skating in her younger days, just like Yuvraj, but was drawn to cricket listening to her father, uncle and grandfather talk. She watched the 2017 Women’s ODI World Cup on TV and wanted to don the national colours after seeing India’s narrow, heart-breaking loss to England in the final. Her father, Gaurav, identified her interest and got her enrolled in the coaching centre where Bhatia and later JP Nautiyal coached her.”I never let her compromise with her cricket but I compromised on her studies,” Gaurav says. “She was very good in her studies. But to achieve a goal or target in life, you have to focus on just that one thing. If you try and do multiple things, you won’t get as much success.”At a YSCE summer camp in 2017-18, Bhatia came across Chopra who then wanted to be a fast bowler. But given her slight build, she was encouraged to bowl legspin. Her run-up and action had to be tweaked accordingly but once that was done, and she was able to generate spin, there was no looking back.In the 2019-20 season, she picked up 20 wickets in the Women’s Under-19 One Day Tournament playing for Uttar Pradesh. During the Covid-19 lockdown, her father left no stone unturned and prepared a pitch at home for single-wicket practice with assistance from Nautiyal and inputs over video calls from Bhatia.”Her body was very flexible because of the stretching, which is part of skating,” Nautiyal says. “Her wrist position comes naturally to her. We had to work on her lines and lengths. But she grasps things quickly and works really hard for hours together.”Chopra picked up eight wickets in the Under-19 T20 Trophy in October 2022, and was then selected for the T20 Challengers and the Quadrangular Under-19 series featuring West Indies and Sri Lanka. A good show at the Under-19 T20 World Cup in South Africa led her to be picked by Warriorz at her base price of INR 10 lakh.The only girl child in the family, Chopra was fascinated after watching videos of Australia legspinner Shane Warne’s bowling. She took an immediate liking to his action and was upset for a few days after he died last year. But through her steady rise and eye-catching outings in the WPL, she is keeping the flag of legspin flying high.

Spunky Sri Lanka out to prove heydays are not behind them

This is also a make-or-break tournament for Shanaka’s captaincy

Andrew Fidel Fernando30-Sep-20231:58

Spin-heavy Sri Lanka could overcome lower-order batting concern to sneak into knockouts

World Cup pedigree: Champions in 1996, semi-finalists in 2003, finalists in 2007 and 2011 – Sri Lanka went through a fantastic stretch in World Cups for these 15 years, but are their best days past them? In 2015, they crashed out in the first knockout (quarter-final), and in 2019, they missed out on the semi-final. They are again expected to be a middling side in 2023.Recent form: Yes, there was that catastrophic collapse in the Asia Cup final, but they had, nevertheless, played some decent cricket to get there, beating Bangladesh twice, and overcoming Pakistan in a thriller.Largely, their recent successes are built on their attack. Matheesha Pathirana’s middle and death-overs bowling has been a vital new addition to the side. In Dilshan Madushanka, they have a left-armer who can swing the new ball at pace.The only side to have defeated them in their last 15 ODI outings are India, but this is less impressive than it sounds. Sri Lanka had to play the Qualifier to get into this World Cup, and many of their recent oppositions are weaker sides who did not make this World Cup.Squad: Dasun Shanaka (capt), Kusal Mendis (vice-capt), Pathum Nissanka, Kusal Perera (wk), Dimuth Karunaratne, Charith Asalanka, Dhananjaya de Silva, Sadeera Samarawickrama (wk), Dushan Hemantha, Maheesh Theekshana, Dunith Wellalage, Kasun Rajitha, Dilshan Madushanka, Matheesha Pathirana, Lahiru KumaraCan Dasun Shanaka emerge from a wretched run of form?•AFP/Getty ImagesKey player: Captain Dasun Shanaka has had about as miserable a run of form with the bat as any player coming into the World Cup. Since the start of the Qualifier, he averages 6.60 with a strike rate of 57.39. This is in his role as a lower-middle order finisher. With Wanindu Hasaranga ruled out of the tournament with injury, Sri Lanka desperately need Shanaka to begin playing big innings, even as he contributes with the ball, in order to give their XI some semblance of balance. Shanaka has never been much of an ODI batter, but he has played some excellent innings in India. This is a make-or-break tournament for his captaincy.Rising star: Since 2021, no batter has made as many runs at No. 5 as Charith Asalanka – an especially impressive stat when you consider the now 26-year-old only made his debut halfway through that year. Capable of finding boundaries early in his innings (especially through the leg side), adept at picking gaps, and blessed with a calm disposition, Asalanka having a good World Cup will go a long way to Sri Lanka putting up decent scores. On the drier tracks, his offbreaks could also be handy.World Cup farewells: It seems unlikely that Kusal Perera (33), and Dimuth Karunaratne (35), will still be around for the 2027 tournament – the former largely because his injuries have piled up terribly. Otherwise, the remainder of the squad are in their early thirties or younger. They would still have to be performing in four years, of course.

Mel Jones: 'If you're after a quiet day, you're probably in the wrong job'

Former Australia international on switching to commentary, hoovering up opportunities and dealing with abuse

Matt Roller17-Jul-2023Moments after Chris Woakes crashed Mitchell Starc through point to clinch England’s three-wicket win in the third men’s Ashes Test at Headingley, Ian Ward turned to Mel Jones at the start of Sky Sports’ analysis of another breathless session. “You’re not allowed a day off,” Ward told Jones, “because wherever you go, we get this.”Jones’ voice has been a constant of Sky’s commentary this Ashes summer, across both men’s and women’s series. She has had a relentless schedule over the last five weeks, covering as much of both series as has been logistically possible. She will miss the Old Trafford Test this week for a short break but either side of that, she will be in Taunton and south London for the finale of both series.”I pinch myself, daily,” Jones tells ESPNcricinfo, interrupting a rare day off. “I never coveted or planned to do the job that I now have, by any stretch of the imagination. It’s an absolute privilege to be thinking that I’ve got a prime seat in two of the best Ashes series that we’re probably going to have.”Related

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During the rain delay on the third day of the Headingley Test, Jones raced down to London for the third women’s T20I at Lord’s – then was back in Leeds the following morning. “I wasn’t down to do it initially, but the two producers put it in my hands. When it rained, it felt like the cricketing gods telling me I’d made the right decision. If you’re after a quiet day, you’re probably in the wrong job.”Jones played 66 times for Australia during her eight-year international career, but it was being dropped that set her on course for life after cricket. In 2001, she was not part of the Australia squad for an Ashes tour to England but was playing for Surrey, and working for the club in a developmental role. “Sky and the ECB had just started a broadcast deal, and they televised one women’s game per summer,” Jones explains.”They asked me to commentate and in my head, I thought, ‘That’s just rubbing salt into the wound, for a game I want to be playing in.’ Then they told me it was £300, so I said, ‘Tell me when, where and what to wear.’ Back then, we weren’t paid [to play] – so I was paid more than every single player collectively that day.”Jones won her place back the following Australian summer but playing in the amateur era meant working alongside as a teacher and in cricket development. After her playing career, she worked as an athlete manager at a sports management company but continued to take up commentary opportunities and became an established voice within an increasingly professional women’s game.In 2015, she was one of four female commentators at the Indian Premier League, and two years later, she decided to “give it a crack” on a full-time basis. “It was hectic for the first couple of years,” Jones reflects. “I knew I was going into a male-dominated world and I thought, ‘Am I going to get enough work?’ So I said ‘yes’ to every opportunity.”For those first few years, I averaged about eight months away from home. I just thought, ‘I have to take this while it’s there.’ And honestly, I was like a pig in mud: most people would give their kidney and left arm if it meant they could travel the world, watching cricket and working with some fantastic people.”

“Sport is a wonderful vehicle for social change. As soon as you start speaking about social justice with cricket it stirs the nest with certain people. You’ve got to manage your energy levels on how you engage at different stages”

And Jones has become increasingly established as a prominent broadcaster, a voice associated with major events and big moments. She cites several colleagues – Ian Bishop, Alan Wilkins, Danny Morrison, and the producer Mike O’Dwyer – as positive influences, but those who have worked with her say she is among the hardest-working people in the industry.”MOD [O’Dwyer] always talked about the Es: engaging, entertaining, educating. I try to keep that at the back of my mind. I don’t want to try and be anyone else, but you’ve also got to remember that it’s an entertainment game and bring that through. My mum knows nothing of the sport – still! – and if she’s watching, I want her to walk away from that having learned something.”Cricket commentary boxes are almost unrecognisable from 20 years ago, with a far broader range of voices which has doubtless changed coverage of the game for the better. Yet those broadcasters who have embodied that change have had to contend with a barrage of abuse, which Jones admits can take its toll.”It goes in waves, and I tick a few boxes here. So there’s definitely a colour piece, and it depends on what country you’re in; sometimes there’s also definitely a gender piece as well. We’re all human: if you said that it doesn’t get to you on some sort of level, I’d worry about myself.”During the innings break of the first women’s ODI last week, Jones led a discussion around misogyny within the game, revealing that she was recently contacted by Victoria Police about a man who had been abusing her on social media and calling a hotline to complain about her being on air due to her gender.”Sport is a wonderful vehicle for social change,” Jones says. “As soon as you start speaking about social justice with cricket, that stirs the nest with certain people. You’ve just got to manage your energy levels on how you engage at different stages: sometimes they might be really high and I’ll be quite vocal on a few things; if you’re travelling around the country and your energy levels are low, you might just choose another time.”Both Ashes series have been hotly contested•PA Photos/Getty ImagesIn reality, Jones’ different perspective to many of her colleagues is a strength. “We all have that whole imposter syndrome in the back of your mind sometimes, when you’re thinking, ‘What am I doing here?’ But I know I have a different lens, and five solid years of broadcasting that I can bring to the table as well.”Like most of the country, Jones has been gripped by both Ashes series: she noticed Australia’s women lacking their usual “edge” during their three consecutive defeats, after 18 months in transition, and believes the men’s series has forced players – and broadcasters – to “throw out the rulebook for Test match cricket”.She has noticed a surge in interest across the country: “When I’m on trains or walking down the street, people are stopping me now and just going, ‘How good are both these Ashes series?’ They want to talk to me about both of them, which is just brilliant.”It is a mark of Jones’ success in her post-playing career – and the transformation of profile in the women’s game in the last two decades – that she is now recognised as a broadcaster first, and a former Australia international second, even as a double-World Cup winner.”TV’s a ridiculous medium: because you’re on it, people think you’re important, for some reason. Kids will come up to me and ask for an autograph because I’m Mel Jones, the commentator, not even knowing I played for Australia, which I find quite amusing. It’s just a different world from those days.”Jones will stay in the UK for the start of the Hundred, before heading home for a short break and then diving into the Australia season. Her attitude is the same as ever: “Bring it on, keep it rolling. I’d prefer to arrive back home and feel as if I’ve got absolutely nothing left in the tank.”

The pushing and shoving is over and we're now at the business stage of the World Cup

The first fortnight of the tournament has been a mixed bag for most teams, save for India and New Zealand, who have been in impressive form

Ian Chappell22-Oct-2023Each 50-over men’s World Cup provides its share of surprises but I wasn’t expecting two favourites, England and Australia, to be struggling to keep their heads above water.England’s loss to Afghanistan was a huge upset and it means they now have to be near flawless to qualify for the knockout stage of the tournament. This won’t be easy; they face some tough opposition.Australia’s batting was dismal in their two lacklustre losses, but they at least showed improvement in beating both Sri Lanka and Pakistan. Australia’s inability to cope effectively with good spin bowling was no great surprise but it did confirm their deficiencies. This signal is not one to send their more fancied opponents. However, it was their shoddy fielding that stood out in Australia’s losses – a failing that often relates to a loss of confidence.They were able to regain their poise in claiming back-to-back victories and those wins came via a much needed improvement in both their pace and spin bowling, and encouragingly against Pakistan, a mammoth opening partnership. The scintillating form of both David Warner and Mitchell Marsh provides a huge fillip to their prospects.Related

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If Australia’s fielding was shoddy, Pakistan’s was absolutely abysmal and left them with a tough qualifying proposition. Australia, on the other hand, are talented enough to make the semi-finals but the major concern is their frailty in coping with good spin.England’s bowling has generally been profligate and their out-and-out speedster Mark Wood deserves an opportunity to use the new ball.The most impressive aspect of Afghanistan’s victory was their attacking attitude and ample spin-bowling threat. I first met the Afghanistan players in the Caribbean during the 2010 men’s T20 World Cup. They expressed the sentiment that they were not there to just make up the numbers. While this is regularly said but not necessarily true, the Afghanistan team – although short on batting talent – lived up to that impressive approach on the field.They have since added to their batting skill while retaining their aggressive attitude. Their spinners attacked, looking for English wickets, and they were backed by thoughtful field placings. When you compare the positive attitude of Afghanistan with the often disappointing negativity that surrounds Bangladesh’s performances, it’s a case of chalk and cheese.

If Australia’s fielding was shoddy, Pakistan’s was absolutely abysmal and left them with a tough qualifying proposition. Australia, on the other hand, are talented enough to make the semi-finals, but the major concern is their frailty in coping with good spin.

England have looked surprisingly tentative and Jos Buttler now has the difficult leadership task of galvanising his team. This will be a demanding test as both his batting and keeping have been disappointing so far, along with an absence of Eoin Morgan-like leadership aptitude.It was a matter of when, not if, South Africa would falter in a 50-over men’s World Cup – it’s their history. The fact that it came against Netherlands, who have many players with South African links in their squad only added to the drama.The skirmish between leading teams India and New Zealand today will be informative as it will provide an insight into the likelihood of their progress to the semi-final stage. In addition to their consistency, both sides have produced the right ingredients for success in the tournament. The two teams have individuals performing effectively in both run-scoring and wicket-taking.The injury to Hardik Pandya is a major concern for the otherwise in-form India, who will anxiously hope the vital allrounder still has a role to play in the tournament.The early stage of the World Cup has involved a lot of pushing and shoving but we now enter the do-or-die stage. The early stage has demonstrated how upsets influence the latter stages of the tournament. However, setting aside New Zealand’s perennial ability to punch above their weight in men’s World Cups, it should concern the ICC that it is the financial heavyweight teams that are once again flexing their muscles when it matters most.

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